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Disrupting Schools: The Institutional Conditions of Disordered Behaviour New edition [Kõva köide]

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  • Formaat: Hardback, 218 pages, kõrgus x laius: 225x150 mm, kaal: 406 g, 6 Illustrations
  • Sari: Disability Studies in Education 23
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-Feb-2019
  • Kirjastus: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
  • ISBN-10: 143316230X
  • ISBN-13: 9781433162305
  • Formaat: Hardback, 218 pages, kõrgus x laius: 225x150 mm, kaal: 406 g, 6 Illustrations
  • Sari: Disability Studies in Education 23
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-Feb-2019
  • Kirjastus: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
  • ISBN-10: 143316230X
  • ISBN-13: 9781433162305

Disrupting Schools: The Institutional Conditions of Disordered Behaviour represents an applied sociological address to the intractable patterns of educational exclusion of students diagnosed with "emotional and behavioural disorders." Starting with the finding that these students commonly share educational trajectories signposted by critical incidents and alienation, this book seeks a scientific solution to this problem via a more reflexive way of understanding these students’ practices in situ—in order to avoid critical incidents and foster inclusion. Pursuing this logic, Disrupting Schools uses Bourdieu’s theorising of practice and Sacks’ Membership Categorisation Analysis and Conversation Analysis to prise open the epistemological dynamics of exclusion by forensically dissecting an incident of classroom violence leading to exclusion. This produces the discovery that institutional conditions operating within teacher-student interactions ensure, via psychologically informed knowledge construction practices, the non-conscious substitution of reflexive understanding for a symbolic violence that underwrites both critical incidents and exclusion. The discovery unlocks the possibility of systemic inclusion based on a consciously controlled reflexive understanding suggested by these findings.



Disrupting Schools: The Institutional Conditions of Disordered Behaviour conceptualises how institutional conditions operating within teacher-student interactions ensure the substitution of reflexive understanding for a symbolic violence that systemically underwrites both critical incidents and exclusion.

Arvustused

Disrupting Schools brings new insight to the significance of reflexive practice and educational inclusion. A timely contribution, this book shows symbolic violence, misrecognition and exclusion as operating at the level of the interaction order through everyday language-based categorisation practices (Rod Kippax). Disrupting Schools brings us face-to-face with more than a critical incident in a classroom where a young male student was excluded from school. We encounter in this book the complexities of symbolic violence, misrecognition, and the challenges of reflexivity in what strives to be, with all good intentions, an inclusive specialist setting. This is an important new book that systematically analyses the myriad challenges of reflexivity in inclusive education. Valerie Harwood, Professor of Sociology and Anthropology of Education at the University of Sydney

Acknowledgements xi
Chapter One The Importance of Understanding
1(31)
Patterns of Educational and Social Exclusion: Similar Outcomes
3(3)
Patterns of Educational and Social Exclusion: Similar Trajectories
6(2)
A Different Way of Thinking
8(11)
Reaching Towards A Better Understanding'
19(1)
What Advantages Are There in This Approach?
20(3)
What Follows
23(1)
Summing Up
24(8)
Chapter Two A Practical Approach for Practical Understanding
32(36)
Act One The Break
35(2)
Act Two The Construction
37(12)
Context Thinking Tools: `Habitus'
37(3)
Context Thinking Tools: The `Field'
40(1)
Positions and Position Taking
41(3)
`Misrecognition' and `Symbolic Violence'
44(4)
The Constructed Object
48(1)
Act Three: An Interrogation of Methods
49(15)
Suitability of a Critical Case Study Approach for Theoretical Generalisability
50(2)
Suitability of MCA and CA for Apprehending Disposition and Position
52(5)
Objectifying Effects of the Methods
57(3)
What Do the Methods Do to the Object?
60(4)
Summing Up
64(4)
Chapter Three Aaron's Dispositions
68(48)
Aaron's Categorisation Talk of `Getting Into Trouble'
69(2)
The `School Relationships MCD
71(19)
`Smartarses', `Teachers' and `Get Fucked Do It Yourself'
71(6)
`Smartarses', `Teachers' and `Taking and Giving Abuse'
77(10)
`Smartarses', `Good People' and `Don't Care What Happens'
87(3)
Summing Up the School Relationships MCD
90(1)
`Friends'/`Cunts' MCD and Autonomy, Trust and Power
90(12)
`Friends', `Cunts' and Autonomy as Bodily Autonomy
97(3)
`Friends', `Cunts' and the Physical Performance of Bodily Autonomy
100(2)
`Friends' and `Knowing People'
102(7)
`Friends' and the Competent Performance of `Smartarse'
106(2)
Summing Up the `Friends'/`Cunts' MCD
108(1)
The `Streetsmart'/`Schoolsmart' MCD: When Isn't a Classroom?
109(4)
Summing Up
113(3)
Chapter Four `Blowing Up'
116(59)
Setting the Scene
117(2)
The First Movement
119(28)
Moral Requirements of the Classroom: `Right I'm Moving You All'
119(2)
Fault Line 1 Bodily Authority and Bodily Autonomy
121(3)
Fault Line 2 Weak and Strong Orientation to Institutional Setting-Tied Activities
124(1)
Fault Line 3 Individualism and the Collective
125(5)
Fault Line 4 Overt and Covert Social Expression
130(5)
Attaching Aaron's Moral Requirements: `Slackin' Off'
135(12)
The Second Movement
147(9)
Moral Requirements of the Classroom: `Sit Down and Do Work'
147(3)
Attaching Aaron's Moral Requirements:'! Wouldn't Sit on My Fuckin Seat'
150(6)
The Third Movement
156(15)
The Moral Requirements of the Classroom: `Settle Down, Calm Down'
156(5)
Attaching Aaron's Moral Requirements: `Schizing Out'
161(10)
Summing Up
171(4)
Chapter Five The Triumph of Misrecognition
175(29)
When Worlds Collide: Blowing Up as Symbolic Struggle
176(9)
Relationships of Symbolic Violence
185(2)
Relationships of Misrecognition
187(3)
The Triumph of Misrecognition
190(8)
Teacher Competency and What Counts as Understanding
191(4)
Teacher Competency, Power Relations and Tacit Self-Interest
195(1)
Overlapping Fields and Epistemological `Doxa-cology'
195(3)
Relationships of Exclusion
198(2)
Summing Up
200(4)
Chapter Six The Possibility of a Better Understanding
204(13)
Towards a Better Understanding
206(7)
Journey's End
213(4)
Appendix A: Index to Transcript Notation 217
Rod Kippax has been a human services research practitioner for over 30 years, specialising in young people diagnosed with "emotional and behavioural disorders." He completed a social science doctorate at the Queensland University of Technology (QUT). He currently runs a consultancy and is a QUT sessional social work lecturer.